I recently found three gems by Ingrid Michaelson/Sara Bareilles, Meiko, and Brandi Carlile on Hotel Café’s October release Winter Songs.
Epic Records and The Hotel Café partnered up to release The Hotel Café Presents Winter Songs, a compilation of original recordings and classic holiday tracks sung by a lineup of female singer-songwriters, many who have been associated with The Hotel Café including Sara Bareilles, Ingrid Michaelson, Brandi Carlile and KT Tunstall. I’m drawn to the originals as the bulk of the other tracks end up sounding corny and cliched with vocals that often miss the mark, namely those by Katy Perry and Alice Smith. I wish they had come up with a better song for Fiona Apple than “Frosty the Snowman”. You don’t need to listen to know what I mean.
The Hotel Café has blossomed over the years into one of the premier singer/songwriter venues in the country and is regarded as “the place that breaks artists.” Musicians view The Hotel Café as a second home and many come to the venue nightly to support one another and to accompany each other on stage. I have found Hotel Cafe’s taste to be quite impeccable. For those not in L.A., watch for the Hotel Café Tours which have brought Rachael Yammagata, Ingrid Michaelson, Meiko, Thao Nguyen, and Katie Herzig to stages nationwide. They make for memorable evenings with each vocalist performing 2-3 songs backed by a house band in the round.
“Winter Song”, crafted by Michaelson and Bareilles, features gorgeous vocal harmonies between the two songbirds along with Katie Herzig, Lenka, Anya Marina, Meiko, Jim Bianco, Cary Brothers, Buddy, Holly Conlan, Marie Digby, Jesca Hoop, Laura Jansen, Tim Jones, Greg Laswell, Jonah Matranga, Joshua Radin, and Butch Walker. It’s sweet and mournful, powerful yet vulnerable, with rich string embellishments and an appropriate grandiose ending.
Meiko’s “Maybe Next Year” is sassy and just what you’d expect from this bad girl who often seems to toy with the boys. The song features opportunely placed horns and keys which fill out the song behind Meiko silky voice with its youth-fllled, succulent charm. Love the climatic ending.
Within “The Heartache Can Wait”, Carlile is earnest and intimate, embodying the mellow elegance that comes naturally to her. It’s sad albeit beautiful when you stare through the tears.
Panda Bear – Person Pitch (2007)
This album delicately led me by the arm towards Animal Collective, when I was confounded by how strange it was. 2007 saw me doing yoga to Person Pitch almost every day, allowing me to sink into what Panda Bear and, as a result, what the whole AC crew had to offer. Person Pitch is simultaneously poppy and abstract, winsome and deranging, creating elaborate and magnificent convoluted sonic collages. mp3: Panda Bear – Comfy in Nautica mp3: Panda Bear – Bros mp3: Panda Bear – Good Girl/Carrots Download Person Pitch MySpace | Website
Lily Allen – Alright, Still (2007)
This album had me rocking out in my car during many of those 2007 summer months. Allen’s smart alec, sassy attitude is emphatic. Her explosion on the scene as one of Britain’s superstars might put off some, but it’s hard not fall for her well produced brand of bouncy, horn heavy, ska-inspired pop.
Check out “Smile”, “LDN”, “Nan You’re A Window Shopper” – explicit! (can’t post!) Download Alright, Still MySpace | Website
Brett Dennen – Hope for the Hopeless (2008)
Brett Dennen inspires me. His lyrics are entirely well considered and thought provoking, and his positive, dynamic melodies are hard to deny. “Make You Crazy”, featuring Femi Kuti, is the true gem here, gorgeous in it’s entirety, speaking about our untrustable government, prisons, child soldiers, and how people treat each other to get ahead. The songs soar, speaking of love, hope, home and peace. “San Francisco” is thoroughly nostalgic especially if you’ve taken any time to get to know Dennen’s amazing city. mp3: Brett Dennen – Make You Crazy mp3: Brett Dennen – Wrong About Me mp3: Brett Dennen – San Francisco Download Hope For The Hopeless MySpace | Website
Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion (2009)
By far my favorite release of the year. Since their inception, Animal Collective has wandered the territorial edges of music, seeking out boundaries previously erected and looking beyond them. They’ve imbued gorgeous indie songs with peculiar vocals and irritating noises, contrasted West African rhythms with British folk melodies, and have hung on a single chord for what seems like eternity. Merriweather feels like a culmination of all of these explorations, achieving a sound that is both accessible and thoroughly innovative. Finally an Animal Collective album that I’m moved to listen to all the way through -hooky and pop drenched in swirls of psychedelia, heavy with sonic texture. mp3: Animal Collective – My Girls mp3: Animal Collective – Summertime Clothes mp3: Animal Collective – Brothersport Download Merriweather Post Pavilion MySpace | Website
Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix (2009)
The danceable, catching indie rock of Phoenix is perfectly featured on their newest release. The tight grooves of the band’s electrifying synth pop flow loudly behind Thomas Mars’ smooth and all the while urgent vocals. Wolfgang is brilliantly sleek with sonic texture, putting the band on the map as one of the most exciting groups to blow up stateside this year. mp3: Phoenix – Lisztomania mp3: Phoenix – 1901 mp3: Phoenix – Lasso Download Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix MySpace | Website
Built to Spill – There Is No Enemy (2009)
On There is No Enemy, Built to Spill investigates an aesthetic they’ve created and honed over the years, revolving around Doug Martsch’s soft, yet penetrating vocals swimming in a bath of refracting guitar tones. The band again finds a new and interesting way to approach their sound making this my favorite BTS album since 1999’s Keep It Like A Secret. mp3: Built to Spill – Aisle 13 mp3: Built to Spill – Hindsight mp3: Built to Spill – Nowhere Lullaby Download There Is No Enemy MySpace | Website
Ray LaMontagne – Trouble (2003)
When Trouble came out it was hard not to become overwhelmed by the power and depth of Ray LaMontagne. The title track is entirely timeless, instantly bringing on comparisons to Van Morrison and Otis Redding, with Ray’s rich and impassioned vocals rising above perfectly nuanced guitars and strings, echoing his quietly devastating meditations on life and love which is the soul of this release. mp3: Ray LaMontagne – Trouble mp3: Ray LaMontagne – Forever My Friend mp3: Ray LaMontagne – How Come Download Trouble MySpace | Website
My Morning Jacket – Z (2005)
When Z came out all I wanted was wrap myself in the sonic blissfulness of “Wordless Chorus”. MMJ’s 4th album sees the band proceeding forward without fear or shame, shaping a sound distinctly their own. Fiery guitar, folk-inspired melodies, soaring rock passages, and psychedelic flashes marry sublimely with Jim James’ legendary vocals. mp3: My Morning Jacket – Wordless Chorus mp3: My Morning Jacket – It Beats 4 U mp3: My Morning Jacket – Off The Record Buy Z MySpace | Website
I’m late on getting you my list of the best albums of the decade, but it’s taken some time to dig through all of the incredible pieces of work that we’ve been hit with over the past 10 years. Since 2000, my ears have become keen to the inner workings of song and sound and it is partly due to the music below that I listen the way that I do. This decade has been an exhilarating one with bands like Animal Collective, Modest Mouse, Broken Social Scene, Death Cab For Cutie, and Sigur Ros solidifying their reach with monumental releases, and acts like Amy Winehouse, Norah Jones, Ray LaMontagne, Vampire Weekend and Bon Iver astonishing listeners with their debuts. I can’t resist including a few albums from smaller artists that are personal favorites, those of Leslie Helpert and The Slip. Dive in.
Zero 7 – Simple Things (2001)
The album combines an alluring mixture of sounds – electronica, jazz, soul, world music – featuring three talented vocalists (Mozez, Sia Furler, and Sophie Baker) to ride the top of these Air-like waves amid deep compositional swirls. mp3: Zero 7 – I Have Seen mp3: Zero 7 – Destiny mp3: Zero 7 – Likufanele Download Simple Things MySpace | Website
I just fell in love with Francois Virot. His stripped down folk pop has a special vocal effect that gets me deep inside. Virot, out of Lyons, France, is becoming a favorite abroad and it’s not hard to tell why. Yes or No may be his first official release, but the fully conceived ideas within the album, achieved with no superfluous additions, are that of a sage. Virot fills out each of the tracks on his own, making it truly hard to believe that this music is made by just one. The bare instrumentation on Yes or No, one guitar, sometimes two, one voice, sometimes two or three, plus handclaps, finger taps, and bits and pieces of percussion, sound like a symphony in my ears. What is created is music that is entirely so much more than what one expects to hear from a “singer-songwriter”. The songs seep with emotion, releasing beautifully suppressed anger, all the while overflowing with generosity and Virot’s open heart. His strum is hard, but the essence is soft, and the melodies soar. You don’t think of a guitarist with a guitar but instead, whatever Virot wants you to imagine.
Not surprisingly, Virot has been chosen over and over to be a part of Blogotheque’s Take A Way Shows. The shorts feature musicians performing in unusual environments, offering an intimate look at the artist. Take the time to get into the one below…
Leslie Helpert perfectly embodies my idea of an artist. She is beautifully quirky, speaks in a language of images, tells you about imaginary friends, and is keen to all that makes life potent. She lives inside of her art and isn’t meant to do much else. Throwing herself into the act of creation, she offers herself as poet, guitarist, songbird, novelist, dancer, and artist (the gorgeous image at the top of Lux Illuminates is hers).
Watching Helpert perform is a captivating, emotional experience. Her body is stirred by the movement of her song, adding bottomless depth to the art she offers.
The American songstress has rendered 5 albums in the last decade, all which resound with her artistry. Ulu is her most recent effort, a 4-song EP recorded in Barcelona with producer Dave Bianchi. Enticed by intuition, Helpert left the states in March for a 6-week tour from Rome to Paris. She was compelled to delay her return and through a series of serendipitous events encountered Bianchi and found herself recording in Barcelona for the month of August. Ulu (December 2009) was then crafted and released on Bianchi’s Barcelona/NYC label “Whatabout Music”.
On Ulu, Helpert conspired with musicians from Spain, Greece, Guinea, Israel, Portugal and California to add cello, harp, Gaida (Greek bagpipes), upright and electric basses, vocals, trumpet and drum-kit to her musings. Helpert’s musicality comes through on the release in the form of guitar, Rhodes piano, electric bass, percussion, beatboxing, and her effusive vocals.
Throughout Ulu, Helpert draws you in with her intoxicating style, using music a modality to deliver art into the moment. “Young Coconut Water”, the EP’s single, embodies this dreamy elegance. As in all of my favorite compositions by the one known as Serpentfly, the song travels through a variety of sections, illustrating the complexity of Helpert’s unique writing style. Soaring horns lift the song up as she wails, woven with nectar-filled harmonies and cymbal crashes.
The rest of the tracks of Ulu are sophisticated and intimate. They capture the potential of this wistful siren, carrying the intelligent listener into a world of living poetry and detailed narrative. Helpert explores the rich timbre of her voice, embodying at once punk music and the sounds of a distant time. Rhythmic lyric and melancholy balladry are accompanied by innovative drumming, sumptuous strings, and evocative vocalizations.
2009 has seen Helpert trying her songs on the keen ears of Europe in small rooms and large theaters throughout Italy, France, Spain, Holland, and England. December still finds Helpert in the romantic lands of Europe.
Below is “Young Coconut Water” along with a few of my favorites from previous releases.
Young Coconut Water
It just so happened, when we were each-others,
We pricked our fingers and became blood brothers.
It was an accident, really, kids climbing on barbed wire,
to go feed the colts little bombs on fire.
And, then again, when we were older,
By coincidence met ice-climbing frozen boulders.
We both anchored the pick-ax and by surprise,
It struck simultaneously in each of our sides,
And so this time we became blood sisters.
I’m your Type A when you’re needing transfusion,
And you’re not to blame, it’s both our confusion.
I, too, walk away like god’s born-again daughter.
Like fresh-pumped-in-the-vein Young Coconut Water,
Ignorant and Ignoble.
Through all adventure, I’ve learned a score.
It’s not your lover you’ve been searching for.
No matter the carriage, the wheel spoke aloud as you drive
They sang it’s not about your lover, this here’s not about your lover.
It’s your genius your longing to keep alive,
It’s your genuis your longing to keep alive.
Animal Collective just released their latest EP, Fall Be Kind. The cohesive 5-song collection speaks to the continuing progression of the group’s sound. Sound effects shimmer throughout the EP and the echoing of Animal Collective’s characteristic otherworldly and layered vocals transport the listener into fantastical realms. This is just what I’ve come to expect from this band. I desire to live in their dream world.
“Graze” begins as a hash-induced lullaby, “Let me begin, feels good ’cause it’s early… some ideas are brewing”, floating into a jubliant swirling of pan flutes. The chorus lures an emphatic sing-a-long. And the end is just mesmerizing as it fades.
I am most infatuated with the stream of consciousness, ethereal vibe of “What Would I Want? Sky”. One is immediately lost in a cloud of thought. Avey Tare’s vocals float above a Grateful Dead sample from “Unbroken Chain” (off Grateful Dead From The Mars Hotel, 1974), widely known as the first ever to be licensed. A clip of Phil Lesh’s vocals “…sky. Whoa I oft-” is looped and somehow reshaped into the title phrase. What results is a gorgeous feat. Near the end of the track, Avey sings “I should be floating but I’m weighted by thinking”, encompassing what Animal Collective has always been about. Ironically, the band coaxes you out of thought and into visceral feeling. Their music is a way for the intelligent mind to let go of anxiety and wrap itself in the complexity of sound instead.
“Bleedings” is not my favorite, but its darkness is beautiful nonetheless.
“On A Highway” follows Avey on another daydream as he travels down the road while the band tours. Singing “I let some hash relax me, get lost in human pleasure,” you can just imagine the feelings he is experiencing in that vehicle. Meditative lyrics and colorful imagery drive the song through a continuous flow of thought. Avey is yet again beset with an racing mind as he sings “…can’t help my brain from thinking. I can’t breathe.”
On the closer, “I Think I Can”, Panda Bear lets loose with jarring rhythms, claps, and array of synthesized samples. It starts out rather eerie but ends up soaring into one of my favorites songs on the EP.
With the Fall Be Kind EP, Panda Bear’s, Avey Tare’s, and Geologist’s brilliance is exposed once again. On the tail of their January 2009 release of the widely acclaimed Merriweather Post Pavilion, this new EP is noticeably less hooky, but no matter as it wraps me up further in Animal Collective and makes me wonder what we’ll hear next. This band perfectly pleases the mind by making a cacophony of sounds sound concordant.
Animal Collective, formed in Baltimore, MD, recently transplanted to NYC….
“What would I want? Sky!”
Is everything alright?
You feeling moany?
You feeling lonely?
You’re not the only
Is everything alright?
You feeling stormy?
You feeling phoney?
You’re not the only
Do you get up up up?
Clouds stop and move above me
Too bad they can’t help me
What is the right way?
Do I float up up up?
When I stop and look around me
Grey is where that color should be
What is the right way?
Old glasses clinking and a
New order’s blinking
and I -
I should be floating but I’m weighted by thinking
That I got on the river
Really can’t make you change
And the sky gets filled up too fast
and the taxi man’s saying, “You betta
give me some money; stop daydreaming, dude!”
When the point of horizon is hiding from you
What would you want sky?
Are you taking it lightly?
Lost in the flurries
You start to worry
You will be buried
Taking it lightly
and so I hurry
I start to worry
Here come them flurries
Is everything alright?
You feeling lonely?
You feeling moldy?
You’re not the only
Is everything alright?
You feeling stormy?
You feeling foamy?
You’re not the only
Do you get up up up?
Clouds stop and move above me
Too bad they can’t help me
What is the right way?
Do I float up up up?
When I stop and look around me
Grey is where that color should be
What is the right way?
Old glasses clinking and a
New order’s blinking and I -
I should be floating but I’m weighted by thinking
I’m a fly on the river
That’ll make me some change
When the sky gets filled up too fast
and the taxi cab’s waiting, “You betta
give him some money;
stop daydreaming, dude!”
When the point of horizon is hiding its blues
What would you want sky?
Grizzly Bear just released an extraordinary claymation video to go along with the song “Ready, Able”, off of their summer release Veckatimest (2009). The video, directed by Allison Schulnik, depicts creatures as their colors and forms melt and morph in a fantastical natural world. The music provides a gorgeous backdrop. As the song floats along, so does the story.
The band’s eccentric sound incorporates lush choral arrangements, atmospheric folk melodies, and exploratory song structures. The harmony-laden, lush grandiosity of their swelling tunes, feature dreamy vocals from all four members. The resulting resonances and melodic swirls offer a seductive, boozy elegance. Their music plays like the Beach Boys mixed with Nick Drake, fused with the theatrical feel of Devotchka and a touch of David Byrne.
Grizzly Bear formed in 2000 in Brooklyn with members Daniel Rossen (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Ed Droste (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Chris Taylor (bass, backing vocals, various instruments, producer) and Christopher Bear (drums, backing vocals). Droste wrote the first album as a form of catharsis after a bad breakup. He gave the CD to his friends and a copy found its way to Bear and Taylor, who liked what they heard. The two met Droste by way of a friend and offered postproduction and remixing help on the songs. The result was Horn of Plenty (2004). Rossen joined to perform guitar on the live shows. In 2006, the band had the good fortune to support TV on the Radio, in 2007, Feist, and in 2008, the band opened for Radiohead on the second leg of their North American tour. On the last date, guitarist Jonny Greenwood named Grizzly Bear his favorite band. Other admiring fans of the group include Fleet Foxes, Jeff Tweedy, CSS and Beirut.
After I heard “Concrete Seconds” off of Pinback’s Blue Screen Life (2001) in early 2006, I began to fall for the band. It’s ethereal rainy day music, inspiring you to float along, deep in thought, intertwined in their lilting rendition of indie rock. The consistency of their sound is comforting and travels through each of their albums. Each song moves with minimalistic keyboard parts, doleful dual vocals, soaring guitar lines, and meditative drum beats. Within them is a certain warmth.
It all started in 1998, when Pinback’s founding members found some time on their hands. Armistead Burwell Smith IV and Rob Crow, both singers, songwriters and multi-instrumentalists, began putting together songs that evolved into their ‘98 self-titled debut, a 10-song thrust into dreamily controlled strangeness. They named the band after a spaceship crew member from the 1974 sci-fi comedy Dark Star: The Spaced Out Odyssey. Sergeant Pinback is actually fuel engineer, Bill Fruge, who puts on Pinback’s space suit when trying to rescue Pinback from suicide from wading into a fuel tank before the start of the ship’s mission to destroy unstable planets. Fruge inadvertently takes the place of Pinback and adopts the ship’s mascot, a mischievous alien “beach ball with claws”, that refuses to stay put in the food locker and forces Pinback to chase it all over the ship. Does it get any stranger?
Pinback’s most recent album, Autumn of the Seraphs, was released in September 2007. The band is currently on tour with dates across the U.S. They play the Ogden in Denver on November 6th.
Nov 5 – Granada Theatre, Lawrence, Kansas
Nov 6 – Ogden Theatre, Denver, Colorado
Nov 7 – The Depot, Salt Lake City, Utah
Nov 9 – Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver, British Columbia
Nov 10 – Neumo’s Crystal Ballroom, Seattle, Washington
Nov 11 – Doug Fir Lounge, Portland, Oregon
Nov 12 – Humboldt State University The Kate Buchanan Room, Arcata, California
Nov 13 – Bimbo’s 365 Club, San Francisco, California
Nov 14 – El Rey Theatre, Los Angeles, California
Nov 15 – Belly Up Tavern, Solana Beach, California
Nov 16 – The Casbah, San Diego, California
Saw Wye Oak last week at the Fox and got more than I expected. I anticipated the indie-folk rock duo from Baltimore sounding good after listening to their recorded material and seeing their name often. But Jenn Wasner and Andy Stack’s contribution onstage was more than I had hoped for.
Wasner is a true emotive force on guitar. Fierce and technical, she adds deep intuition into her playing which causes every song to soar. She’s dirty with distortion and along with her graceful vocals, it enforces a beautiful dichotomy. I find Wasner to be what is so alluring about the band, but without Stack’s additions, there would be no compliment to her power and grit. Stack intertwines his vocals with Wasner’s, while simultaneously playing drums with his right hand and both legs, and bass lines and effects with his left on keys. Together the two create huge walls of sound that envelope. Their lyrics have an emotional directness, adding romantic hues to this hazy shoegaze fuzzpop.
Wasner and Stack formed Wye Oak in 2006. Their first album, If Children, was released in 2007 and again in 2008, once the group signed with Merge Records. The Knot, their second, was released this year.